Route-specific boat day
Vis and Stiniva Private Boat Tour from Split
Thirty miles of open blue, then the cliff gap at Stiniva, the shallow turquoise of Budikovac, and a fisherman's lunch in Komiža. The biggest day on this coast — planned honestly, booked for you.
- Stiniva cove
- Budikovac lagoon
- Komiža lunch
- Early start, full day
Route logic
Build the day around crossings, swim stops, lunch timing, Hvar time, and the actual forecast.
Route overview
The far island is the point
Vis sat closed to outsiders as a military island until 1989, and it still feels like the Adriatic before the crowds — which is exactly why the long crossing is worth it. Tell us who is on board and we will plan a Vis day with the right boat for the distance, the stops in the right order, and the price confirmed before you commit.
Access Adriatic is a private concierge for the Split–Hvar corridor that plans and books private boat tours from Split to Vis: Stiniva’s cliff-gap cove, the shallow Budikovac lagoon, the Green Cave, and lunch in Komiža or Vis town. You tell us about your group once; we come back with two or three boat-and-skipper options at confirmed prices and book the one you choose.
How far is Vis from Split by private boat?
Vis lies roughly 30 nautical miles from Split — about 75–100 minutes each way on a modern RIB or speedboat in settled seas, and noticeably longer on slower, more comfortable boats. That single fact shapes the whole day: an early start, a full-day plan, and a boat genuinely fit for open water rather than the cheapest thing in the harbor.
What should a Vis day actually include?
The honest answer: fewer stops than the brochures suggest. The crossings already spend three-plus hours of your day, so the best Vis days choose three or four stops and enjoy them properly.
| Stop | What it is | Worth knowing |
|---|---|---|
| Stiniva | Pebble cove behind a narrow cliff gap | Anchor outside, swim or tender in; quietest early and late |
| Budikovac lagoon | Shallow turquoise pool between islets | The easy, waist-deep swim — best of the day for kids |
| Komiža | Fishing town on the west coast | Konoba lunch, the least touristy harbor on the route |
| Vis town | Old harbor, founded as Greek Issa | History and a slow espresso; trade it off against swim time |
| Green Cave (Ravnik) | Sea cave you can swim into | No tickets, no queue — the relaxed cave on this route |
| Blue Cave (Biševo) | The famous lit cave | Ticketed and queued — an add-on that costs an hour or two |
Vis with or without the Blue Cave?
Skip the cave unless seeing it is the point of your trip. Adding Biševo means an extra crossing and a ticketed queue that can take an hour or more in season — time that otherwise goes to Stiniva or the lagoon. If the cave is what you are coming for, build the day around it instead with our private Blue Cave tour from Split, which treats the entry logistics as the headline rather than an afterthought.
When is the crossing at its best?
Late May to September, with mornings almost always calmer than afternoons — the Maestral sea breeze typically builds the return chop after lunch, which is why good skippers front-load the far stops. A real Bura forecast is a postponement, not a challenge. The Bura and Maestral guide explains how the two winds shape route decisions on this coast.
What it costs
Plan around €1,000–2,500+ for the boat for a full private Vis day from Split — boat class, season, and route length move the number, and fuel for sixty-plus miles is the biggest single factor. Treat those as planning figures: every option we send includes the exact all-in price for your date, and nothing is booked until you choose one. The Croatia boat day costs guide breaks down what drives the ranges.
Starting on the water for the first time, or traveling with small children? The Split to Hvar and Pakleni Islands day gives you more swimming per mile of crossing — and we will tell you honestly which day fits your group when you write to us.
Roughly 30 nautical miles — 75–100 minutes each way by speedboat
Stiniva, Budikovac, Komiža, and Vis town in one loop
Blue Cave possible as an add-on, not an obligation
Popular routes
Private boat routes people ask for first
Use these as starting points. The final route should fit the forecast, boat type, lunch plan, and pace of the group.
The classic Vis loop
Across to Stiniva while the morning sea is calm, the Budikovac lagoon for a long shallow-water swim, lunch in Komiža, and the town walls of Vis before the run home.
Swim-first Vis day
Skip the towns, chase the water — Stiniva, Green Cave on Ravnik, Budikovac, and a konoba lunch on the quiet side. For groups who measure a day in swims.
Vis with the Blue Cave add-on
The full Biševo and Vis circuit for groups set on seeing the cave — an earlier start, tighter timing, and honest expectations about the queue.
Sample itinerary
Stops that shape the day
The final order can shift with weather, mooring conditions, lunch plans, and guest pace. This is the route logic to plan around.
- Stop 1
8:30 — out of Split early
The long crossing rewards an early start. Coffee on board, the city shrinking behind you, and the open channel while the sea is at its calmest.
- Stop 2
Stiniva cove
Anchor outside the famous cliff gap and swim the last stretch in. The pebble beach between the rock walls is one of the Adriatic's great arrivals.
- Stop 3
Budikovac lagoon
A shallow turquoise pool between islets — waist-deep water a hundred meters from shore, and the slowest, easiest swimming of the day.
- Stop 4
Komiža or Vis town
Lunch at a fisherman's konoba in Komiža or a slow hour inside Vis town's old harbor — founded as Greek Issa over two thousand years ago.
Best conditions
Who should choose this route
Adventurers and return visitors
If you have already done Hvar and the Pakleni, Vis is the step further out — wilder coves, fewer boats, and the feeling of having gone somewhere.
Swim-led groups
Stiniva, Budikovac, and the Green Cave are some of the clearest water on the coast. This day exists for people who want to be in it, not just look at it.
Not the easiest first boat day
With young kids, short time, or unsure sea legs, a Pakleni or Brač day delivers more water for less crossing — we will say so rather than sell you the long one.
How it works
Turn the route idea into operator-ready details.
A route page should help the guest understand the tradeoffs before the request reaches an operator.
- Step 1
Tell us about your day
Dates, group size, where you are staying, and what Vis means to you — Stiniva photos, empty coves, the cave, or just the far island.
- Step 2
Choose from two or three real options
Boats matched to the distance, skippers who run this route weekly, the stop order that fits the forecast — each with its full price.
- Step 3
We book it and stay close
Boat, lunch table, and timing confirmed. If the wind argues with the plan, we rework the day with you and the skipper before it costs you anything.
Trust
Route advice should be useful, not overconfident
Access Adriatic can explain the route and coordinate options, while the final skipper/operator call depends on weather, boat, group, and availability.
The crossing, called honestly
Vis is open-water both ways. If the forecast says the day will be rough rather than memorable, we move it — we do not sell crossings people regret.
Prices confirmed before you commit
The long route makes fuel the swing factor, so every option comes with the real all-in number for your date, not a from-price.
The whole harbor, not one fleet
We do not own boats. We match the day from trusted local skippers who actually run the Vis route — that is the point of a concierge.
Stops in the right order
Stiniva at the quiet hours, Budikovac when the sun is high, lunch where the group's energy will want it. Sequence is half of what you are paying for.
FAQ
Route planning questions
How far is Vis from Split by private boat?
Vis is roughly 30 nautical miles from Split. A modern RIB or speedboat makes the crossing in about 75–100 minutes each way in settled conditions; slower, more comfortable boats take longer. That is why Vis days start early — usually between 8 and 9 — and run a full day.
How much does a private boat tour to Vis cost?
As a planning range, private Vis days from Split run roughly €1,000–2,500+ for the boat, depending on boat class, season, and how far the route stretches. Fuel for the long crossing is the big variable. Every option we send includes the exact all-in price before you book.
Is Stiniva accessible by boat?
Boats anchor outside the narrow cliff opening and you swim or tender the last stretch in — the gap is too tight to drive through, and that is exactly what keeps Stiniva special. Pack water shoes for the pebbles. In peak season the skipper times the stop for the quieter ends of the day.
Should we add the Blue Cave to a Vis day?
Only if seeing the cave matters more to you than unhurried time on Vis. The cave adds the Biševo crossing plus a ticketed, queued entry, which can cost an hour or two of swim and lunch time. If the cave is the headline for you, our private Blue Cave day from Split is built around it instead.
When is the best time of year for the Vis crossing?
Late May through September is the reliable window, with June and September often the sweet spot — settled seas, warm water, fewer boats. Mornings are usually calmest; the afternoon Maestral builds the return chop, and a strong Bura forecast means moving the day rather than forcing it.
Is the Vis day right for kids or first-time boaters?
It can be, for kids who already enjoy boats — but it is the longest common route from Split, with open-water crossings each way. For young children or anyone unsure about sea comfort, a Pakleni Islands or Brač day gives more swimming for far less crossing.
Request route options
Send the date, group size, stay location, and route priorities.
Tell us your dates, group size, where you are staying, and whether Stiniva, the lagoon, Komiža, or the Blue Cave add-on matters most. We will reply with two or three Vis days that fit.